Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Thursday, January 8, 2015
Rome Journal IV: Pier Paulo Pasolini’s Mamma Roma, An Iconography
Drawing by Hallie Cohen of Roman turtle fountain Pasolini loved
Pier Paulo Pasolini’s masterpiece Mamma Roma(1962) is a story about a woman, but it’s also a tale of a
city. So any understanding of the movie inevitably involves an almost Homeric odyssey
providing a different Baedeker than the ones which emphasize great monuments to antiquity like the Pantheon and the Colosseum. The
character Anna Magnani plays actually represents a mythos, a set of histories
both pagan and Christian, sacred and profane that are manifest in the varying
locations that Pasolini selected for his film. Each setting in turn is a
succession of paintings come to life replete with its own iconography which is
a history of Roman religion, art and culture. Pasolini’s Rome exudes none of the
glamor of, for instance, a Fellini. His Rome is not the Via Veneto of La Dolce Vita(1960)with its aristocrats and
intellectuals. Rather it’s the world of the poor, the dispossessed, the marginalized, who occupy sterile and dilapidated public housing. And like the French
filmmaker Robert Bresson, he pursues the notion of isolation and spiritual
confinement. Magnani’s Mamma Roma is a prostitute who is seeking a better life
for herself and her son Ettore, but her son ends up literally crucified, tied
to a bed, in the prison hospital where he dies. There is a joyful scene at the end of
Fellini’sNights of Cabiria (1957) when the
prostitute (Guilietta Masina) who has almost been killed by her lover transcends her misery. However, it finds no
parallel in Mamma Romawhere
Magnani’s world narrows before her and she cries out with a despair redolent of
Greek tragedy.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.